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Are Humans Rational?

Explore the mechanisms of human thought and the regularities in human behavior, examining the rationality or irrationality behind decision-making. Investigate topics such as memory, the card selection task, and the conjunction fallacy.

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Are Humans Rational?

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  1. Are Humans Rational? SymSys 100 April 14, 2011

  2. Anderson’s Rational Approach to Cognition • What underlies the regularities that we see in human behavior? • One answer: • Because of characteristics of the mechanisms of human thought • Another answer: • Because the regularities represent the optimal response to the characteristics of the environment

  3. Example: Forgetting • Why do we forget? • Is it because: • our memory is imperfect • Or is it because: • it costs us something to keep information around and… • Information from a long time ago is less likely to be useful than information we’ve been exposed to recently. • If the latter, then we might predict: • That the form of the forgetting function should match the form of the relevance function

  4. Power Law of Forgetting(Anderson and Schooler, 1991) or:

  5. Which topic is most likely to be in tomorrow’s paper? Two headlines from yesterday: Man arrested in Times Square bomb plot Rondo’s 19 assists help Celtics beat Cleveland Two headlines from this morning’s paper: House passes compromise budget Bill Bonds convicted of obstruction, not perjury

  6. Power Law of Recurrence • Just like memory, recurrence of topics in the New York times obeys the power law. • Maybe memory obeys the power law to conform to the structure of experience, not because of features of the architecture of memory.

  7. Rational or Irrational? The card selection task “If a card has an even number on one side, then it has a vowel on the other” Here are 4 cards, with a number on one side, and a letter on the other. Which cards should you should turn over to see if any of the cards violates the rule: 3 8 A N “If you are drinking alcohol, then you mustbe over 18”. Here are 4 cards, with the drink a student is drinking on one side, and their age on the other. Which cards should you turn over to see if any of the students are breaking the rule: coke beer 22 17

  8. Explanations of Card Selection Task Results • Oaksford & Chater’s Theory • From “A rational analysis of the selection task as optimal data selection”. • Participants turn over cards that they expect will give them the most information • Premise and consequence are thought to pick out rare situations and thus to be highly informative • Their example: • ‘If you eat tripe, then you will get sick’ “The purpose of a rationalanalysis is to show thatbehavior is optimally adaptedto the environment.”

  9. Is the Human Mind ‘The Best of All Possible Minds?’ A parable from Voltaire’s Candide(Lightly adapted by jlm) • Candide inquired into the cause that had reduced Pangloss to so miserable a condition. • "Alas," replied the preceptor, "it was love; love, the comfort of the human species; love! tender love!“ • "Alas,” cried Candide, “But how could this beautiful cause produce in you so hideous an effect?" • Pangloss answered thus: "O my dear Candide, you remember Pacquette, that pretty wench, who waited on our noble Baroness; in her arms I tasted the pleasures of Paradise, which produced these Hell torments. She was infected with an ailment, and perhaps has since died of it; she received this present of a learned Franciscan; he was indebted for it to an old countess, who had it of a captain of horse … who had it in a direct line from one of the fellow adventurers of Christopher Columbus." • "O Pangloss," cried Candide, "what a strange genealogy is this! Is not the devil the root of it?" • "Not at all," replied the great man, "it was a thing unavoidable, a necessary ingredient in the best of worlds; for if Columbus had not caught in America this disease, which contaminates the source of generation, and is evidently opposed to the great end of nature, we should have had neither chocolate nor tomatoes."

  10. Other Explanations of Performance in the Card Selection Task • Ambiguity: People interpret ‘if’… ‘then’ to mean different things in different contexts (“if and only if”, maybe). • Availability: Statement of the rule does not mention the consonant, thus participants don’t think about it much. • Why do people do better with the drinking example? • Laws and social rules bring to mind a concern about the importance of compliance, leading to a search for possible violations. • Did evolution endow us with innate ‘Cheat detectors’, as proposed by Tooby and Cosmides? • Only some people think so! • The one clear lesson: Reasoning does not occur strictly by structure sensitive rules: It is also sensitive to content

  11. Rational or Irrational?The Conjunction FallacyTversky & Kahneman, 1983 FeministBank Tellers BankTellers Feminists

  12. T&K’s Explanation of the Conjunction Fallacy • “We propose that a judgment of probability or frequency is commonly biased toward the natural assessment that the problem evokes. Thus, the request to estimate the frequency of a class elicits a search for exemplars, the task of predicting vocational choice from a personality sketch evokes a comparison of features, and a question about the co-occurrence of events induces an assessment of their causal connection. These assessments are not constrained by the extension rule. • Although an arbitrary reduction in the extension of an event typically reduces its availability, representativeness, or causal coherence, there are numerous occasions in which these assessments are higher for the restricted than for the inclusive event.”

  13. Framing Effects Or after the same cover story…

  14. Why does this happen? • We evaluate outcomes relative to a baseline or neutral point. • Losses loom larger than gains. • Both gains and losses show a diminishing returns effect. • Thus the subjective utility of a larger gain or loss is less than it ‘should’ be, relative to smaller gains and losses.

  15. Are T&K Overplaying the Laws of Probability?Chase, Hertwig & Gigerenzer, 1998 • “Proponents of [competing views] agree on one critical point: rationality requires reasoning in accordance with the rules of probability theory. … [But] no single conception of probability is shared by all statisticians and philosophers… In our view, wherever a norm’s applicability depends on our interpretation of probability in this way, we are not justified in treating it as an unequivocal norm of sound reasoning.”

  16. Visions of Rationality • ‘Bounded Rationality’ (Simon, 1957) • People don’t have the resources it would take to be rational; they are always working under constraints. • “Expecting people’s inferences to conform to classical rational norms in such complex environments requires believing that the human mind is a ‘Laplacean demon’: a supercalculator with unlimited time,knowledge, and computational power.” (Chase et al., TiCS, 1998) • Instead of optimizing, says Simon, they ‘satisfice’. • A satisficing strategy may often be (near) optimal if the costs of the decision-making process itself, such as the cost of obtaining complete information, are considered in the outcome calculus.

  17. Failure of Bayesian Inference, and how to reduce them • Even doctors do badly on problems stated with probabilities. • This is called ‘Base Rate Neglect’ • Both undergrads and doctors do much better on problems stated with ‘natural frequencies’. • What causes base rate neglect, according to Chase et al?

  18. Fast and Frugal Heuristics • Which has the largest population: Graz or Salzburg? Graz: 223,000Salzburg: 145,200 • The ‘recognition heuristic’: • if you recognize one object and not the other, then infer that the recognized object has the higher value on the target variable; if you do not recognize either object, then guess.

  19. “Take the best” • What happens if you recognize both cities? • Use ‘Take the Best’ • Search for facts about each city, starting with those most likely to be good predictors of the answer. • How many professional sports teams? • How many universities? • How many people from there have you heard of? • When you find a variable where you know the answer for both cities, you stop, and choose on that basis. • Often this is more accurate than considering all available sources of information.

  20. Are Humans Rational? • Yes • Anderson, Chater • No • Tversky, Kahneman, Voltaire • They do pretty well with limited resources • Simon, Gigerenzer • Your opinion?

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